Determinants of functional outcomes after trauma in humanitarian settings
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Project overview
The research aimed to assess functional outcomes of trauma patients in humanitarian settings and analyse the determinants of these outcomes. It found the Activity Independence Measure - Trauma (AIM-T) is valid, reliable and could be applied in humanitarian contexts.
Countries
Global
Organisations
Karolinska Institutet
Medecins sans Frontieres
Partners
Area of funding
Humanitarian Research
Grant amount
£350,385
Start date
01
July
2018
End date
01
December
2022
Project length (in months)
53
Funding calls
R2HC Annual Funding Call
Focus areas
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Topics
Rehabilitation
Status
Closed
Project solution
This project offers [specific solution or intervention] to tackle [challenge]. By implementing [strategies, tools, or innovations], the project aims to achieve [desired outcomes]. The approach is designed to [specific actions or methods] to bring about meaningful change in [community, region, or issue area].
Expected outcomes
This project aims to achieve [specific outcomes], such as [measurable results, improvements, or changes]. The expected impact includes [benefits to the target community, advancements in research or innovation, or long-term effects]. By the end of the project, we anticipate [specific changes or milestones] that will contribute to [broader goals or objectives].
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Principal Investigator: Bérangère Gohy, Humanity & Inclusion
RESEARCH SNAPSHOT: How can we measure independence after injury in humanitarian settings?
Trauma care in humanitarian settings is usually focused on saving life and limbs, and less on how patients are living their daily life after injury, a critical aspect of their recovery. Assessing patients’ independence in daily life activities is therefore crucial to document. However, tools to measure this, tailored to humanitarian contexts, are lacking.
[.cta_link]View Snapshot[.cta_link]
What did this study set out to achieve?
The Activity Independence Measure - Trauma (AIM-T) was developed as a practical tool allowing healthcare professionals to evaluate independence of a patient after injury, in key daily life activities. It was developed by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and Humanity &; Inclusion (HI) in 2011 in Afghanistan and used in other countries without formal testing. This research set out to confirm the validity and reliability of the AIM-T before further use, and assess recovery of functioning among patients with traumatic injury.
This research project was implemented in two phases:
- Phase 1: to revise and evaluate a measure of independence in activities, the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
- Phase 2: to conduct a longitudinal study to assess recovery of functioning among patients after acute orthopedic, visceral and/or skin injury, and its associated factors, including early rehabilitation.
What were the key findings?
From the initial AIM-T composed of 20 activities, the AIM-T was revised to 12 activities considering:
- Brevity and focus: 9 activities were removed due to redundancy
- Cultural appropriateness and relevance: 10 activities were revised, and one added.
This research provided evidence that the AIM-T is:
- Valid: The AIM-T can discriminate between different types of patients, is consistent with other measures, reflects independence in activities, and is best structured in three subscales.
- Reliable: There was a good-to-excellent agreement between raters.
The longitudinal study found:
- Patients gradually recovered functioning over the first six months after injury.
- Age, type and location of injury, baseline independence and trauma care interventions were associated with recovery of independence at one or several timepoints.
- Patients receiving early physiotherapy (i.e., within 48 hours of admission) were more likely to be independent at hospital discharge and after three months.
What does this mean for policymakers and practitioners?
Having a valid and appropriate tool to gather data on the patients’ outcomes in terms of disability may contribute to the improvement of the quality of trauma care in humanitarian settings through:
- At health professionals’ level, by improving practice: contributing to a comprehensive assessment, promoting a patient-centered approach, encouraging early mobilisation, supporting clinical reasoning and trauma team decision-making (e.g. discharge planning).
- At service level, by monitoring and improving the quality of trauma care: using the AIM-T as quality of trauma care indicator - beyond mortality and morbidity, benchmarking the recovery of functioning after injury in humanitarian settings, and promoting the early integration of rehabilitation and its provision along the continuum of care.
- At a global level, by informing advocacy: producing reliable figures on the burden of injury beyond mortality and morbidity in different humanitarian settings.
For an adequate use of the AIM-T, healthcare professionals must be trained on its use and practical applications, using the training materials developed and available open access (E-learning and guidelines).
E-learning course now available
This free online course on DisasterReady is available for professionals seeking to use the AIM-T.It introduces the AIM-T's 12 activities and scoring system, as well as providing concrete examples of its applications in daily practice. The course is available in English, French and Arabic.
[.cta_link]E-learning course[.cta_link]
[.slimline-cta-box][.slimline-cta_heading]Learn more[.slimline-cta_heading][.slimline-cta_paragraph]Learn more about the study and explore the AIM-T resources: Recovery of functioning after injury in humanitarian settings | HI[.slimline-cta_paragraph][.slimline-cta-box]
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Project delivery & updates
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